Learning to love Disneyland again

Hotel packages and complimentary kids’ meals make it more affordable

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Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland is the centerpiece of Fantasyland.
Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland is the centerpiece of Fantasyland. (MCT News Service)
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My wife and I sprung the trip on our two children as an end-of-school surprise, just hours before takeoff for our flight. I tried to freeze the moment we told them with a photograph, but Noah, 10, was a blur leaping off the couch.

Disneyland experts recommended multiday tickets, allowing for separate days at Disneyland and California Adventure. Theme-park tickets are slightly cheaper with packages, or bought online from approved third-party vendors (but beware of ticket scams on Craigslist). A 3-day pass for our family of four purchased through arestravel.com cost – gulp – nearly $1,000.

Soon we found ourselves at the Disneyland gate at 7 a.m. on a Sunday morning. Not a fan of theme parks, there I was, in short socks, carrying a backpack full of fruit leather, two cameras and three kinds of sunscreen, next to two very bouncy children.

Some multiday tickets come with a “Magic Morning” 1-hour-early admission pass, which we used to get a jump on Disneyland’s famously long lines on weekends.

Speed walking through a nearly-empty Disneyland, we consumed the park’s thrill premiere rides – Space Mountain, Star Tours, Splash Mountain, Big Thunder and Indiana Jones Adventure – in gulps. It was a buffet of adrenaline.

Disneyland is a luxury for most visitors, given its steep admission prices, and appears to know it. No detail seemed too small. The sidewalk buskers were skilled ensembles. The actresses playing princess are as elegant and beautiful as princesses on screen, and an actor conducting a Star Wars Jedi training for kids executed a one-handed cartwheel, light saber in hand, just like a Skywalker. We even saw a worker polishing the inside of a trash-can lid.

Disneyland rides are also stories, connecting children to characters and narrative.

As a child, I was terrified of the Pirates of the Caribbean, a dimly lit, floating ride into the marauders’ den. But my son Noah shrugged it off. He’d just seen “The Avengers” movie. How scary, really, are animated dummies?

Midway through our ride blitz, my 6-year-old daughter, Anna, stopped at the park’s huge lagoon and pointed to the water. “We just passed real baby ducks!” she said indignantly.

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